The Magazine for the Art Glass Industry
Jan/Feb 1994 Volume 18, Number 1 Cover TOC
March/April 1994  Volume 18, Number 2 Cover TOC
May/June 1994 Volume 18, Number 3 Cover TOC
July/August 1994 Volume 18, Number 4 Cover TOC
Sept/Oct 1994 Volume 18, Number 5 Cover TOC
Nov/Dec 1994 Volume 18, Number 6 Cover TOC

       
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    Back Issue

Kiln Firing Procedures and Annealing
In Part 1, Dan Fenton discusses the heating phase and the process phase. 

Larger Things to Come: The Cast Glass of John Lewis
In the beginning, working with glass was recreational; John Lewis experimented with the material to satisfy his curiosity. And it turned out to be his life's work.
Beads From the Beginning
Like the beginning of any good structure, beads need a good foundation. Brian Kerkvliet discusses how to select the appropriate mandrel and kilnwash.

Heart-to-Heart Selling
In an ongoing attempt tp provide retailers and studios with business information Glass Art presents Heart-to-Heart Selling. Leil Lowndes describes 14 subliminal sales techniques that make the difference. Customers say they buy with their heads, but they have a decision-making organ in their bodies far more powerful than their brain.

Glass and Iron: The New Orleans Scene
This past winter, the Contemporary Arts Center (CAC) in New Orleans sponsored Glass & Iron, an exhibition of mostly large-scale sculptural works by 12 of New Orleans' glass artists.

Silkscreening Decals for Glass
Richard Walters reveals some easy methods for silkscreening decals on glass. Some knowledge of photography, the use of negatives and positives, glass paints and enamels is required.

Sandblasting
Dan Fenton and Kathy Bradford present an overview of hand cut stencil resist materials -- "buttercut", vinyl and polyethylene sheet, and the high-strength, pressure-sensitive paper tapes.
 

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